DOT COM 2.0 - Separating the Hype

Admin

15/09/2007 12:15:32

10 Posts
DOT COM 2.0 - Separating the Hype
The following is a list of 'propositions' the veracity of which will be put to debate. We invite all members to submit their own which might augment or replace them.

1) We welcome the evolution towards the use of web-based interaction with our business associates, clients and suppliers, the use of information produced and edited by a global non-expert community and the deployment of evolving web-based global software applications for our core activities.

2) We are prepared with any necessary controls for maintaining the integrity and security of our organisations' data.

3) With more advanced web software we expect to see a reduction in the nuisance and security threats posed by SPAM, virus and confidential data probing software agents.

4) We do not expect to lose efficiency or focus as our employees make use of the increasing access to global information structures and streams.

Life on internet

15/09/2007 13:52:23

10 Posts
Re: DOT COM 2.0 - Separating the Hype
My personal research shows that only 20 percent of internet users are using web 2.0. I think this figure correlates well with the expression that 20 percents of one’s clients is 80 percent of revenue.

How effective is Social Media?

This is the answer to a bunch of questions that I posted here

The easiest way to answer this question is to demonstrate it: Go to www.Googel.com and type in: How effective is social media?

Google doing what it does best comes back with a nice varied selection of articles. From the good side to the bad side and the ugly of course.

On the good side you have

Jeremiah Owyang of Forrester Research ecently met Experts in the field to discuss how effective social media is in a recession

http://www.web-strategist.com/blog/2008/02/06/social-media-effective-during-recessions/

On the bad Side:

Social media “struggling for effective metrics” Just what is success and how do you measure it click here for the article

And the ugly:

Leon Apel makes a case that all the time and effort may not be with it:

http://www.leonapel.com/2008/07/10/how-effective-are-social-media-submissions/

There are many other results on the page that are worth looking at, this is just my selection. Anybody else got any comments about this?